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I'm a well-known mainframe performance guy, with almost 30 years of experience helping customers manage systems. I also dabble in lots of other technology. I've sought to widen the Performance role, incorporating aspects of infrastructural architecture.
I'm a world-famous podcaster and screencaster (albeit VERY thinly spread). :-)

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Very few people spend as much time as I do down in the guts of individual SMF records. But for those who do ERBSCAN / ERBSHOW is an invaluable tool... ERBSCAN, issued in ISPF 3.4 against an SMF data set, presents you with a list of SMF records and some VERY high level information. Such as the date and time the record was cut, the SMF ID and the record type and subtype. ERBSHOW nnnn, issued from... [More]

Every once in a while :-) I do something really dumb... Thanks to Debra and family for the bath bomb... Rather than throw it in the bath wrapped I chose to cut it open and pour the contents in. The result? Rather like bathing with dead flies. :-) And, no, I was sober at the time. :-)

As I've mentioned before I'm using Roller's "Referer URL" page - for my developerWorks blog - to analyse where my blog hits are coming from. (It's an informal exercise because I can only really work with hits that involve a search engine of some sort - and some 80% of my hits are said to be "direct".) Recently I've had a rash of "pornospam" comments to my blog. (As previously noted I've a way of... [More]

Occasionally you'll (hopefully briefly) see SPAM comments on this blog. I'm grown up about this sort of thing and just remove the comments when I see them. I hope you're grown up enough to cope with this irritating phenomenon as well. But I've gotten fed up with having to mark these comments as SPAM. So I added some code to my Firefox extension to create a little button on my "Comment Management"... [More]

Thanks to Oliver Robinson for pointing this out to me: In MXG Newsletters Numbers 50 and 51 Barry Merrill discusses MXG / WPS support in what I think is a detailed and fair way. (Oliver, for the record, works for WPC who develop WPS.) Barry and I discussed WPS and MXG over a year ago. I think WPS has come a long way in this time and is now a very credible alternative to SAS for many applications,... [More]

Nowadays - actually thenadays :-) but more so nowadays - the value of a web page is related to how well structured it is. Well structured from a mashup programmer's point of view... As I often say you have to assume that people will want to take your web pages and mash them up in ways you never thought likely. If your web page is hard to navigate, extract material from, etc then people will use... [More]

This is really just a test of some Firefox Extension code of mine... but it's kind of interesting in its own right... The following is a table containing the country-level summary of Search URLs that somehow get a reader to my blog on any given day. (I have another table ranking search terms.) Most days the USA and India are at the top of the list. And there's usually a smattering of other... [More]

!This is a great song for a great cause... I saw Queen + Paul Rodgers play this in 2005 in Hyde Park. Actually Paul did nothing - Roger Taylor sang it. :-) But now they've worked on it as part of their current studio sessions and have rushed it out - for free . So download, play it, donate and tell your friends.... Get it from here and read all about it . Now I've Downloaded And Listened To It I... [More]

In September 1997 DFSORT Release 13 was shipped (to coincide with the release of OS/390 Release 4). It took a nice idea from Syncsort and extended it. In case you didn't know OUTFIL allows you to read an input data set (and perhaps sort it) and write to multiple output files from the resulting records - perhaps selecting subsets of the records and reformatting them (and differently to each output... [More]

!Somehow I seem to have end up writing a "Memories of..." series of blog posts. That wasn't the intention but a set of threads on IBM-MAIN Listserver got me to thinking about these nice venerable technologies - VIO, Hiperbatch, Batch LSR and Pipes. By couching these posts in terms of "memories of" it sounds like they're perhaps obsolete. With the possible exception of Hiperbatch that probably... [More]

Thanks to Kevin Aires for pointing this out to me... "Boris in Wonderland" is a chat show in Secondlife - hosted by one Boris Frampton of IBM. Go here for the first episode. Andy Stanford-Clark (Ginger Mandelbrot in Secondlife) is interviewed about his applications and creations. The Monty Python quote "look out there are Llamas" is relevant here - but you'll just have to roll the video to find... [More]